Regime Change Is Dead. Long Live Regime Change.

It would be tragic if the United States bolstered the staying power of Iran's dictatorship just when so many Iranians appear prepared to risk everything to be rid of it.

BY JOHN P. HANNAH | SEPTEMBER 11, 2009

Despite Iran's disappointing response this week to the international call for negotiations on its nuclear program, the Barack Obama administration continues to hold out hope that some combination of inducements and further pressures will persuade the Islamic Republic to abandon its quest for the bomb. But the fact is that a central, but unspoken element of President Obama's strategy for securing a deal -- his readiness to acknowledge the legitimacy and permanency of the Iranian regime -- has been severely undercut by Iran's post-election turmoil.

Obama entered office determined to re-energize diplomacy by reversing the George W. Bush administration's "axis of evil" approach. From the moment of his inauguration, the president offered Iran's rulers an "open hand," pledging to engage them on the basis of "mutual interest and mutual respect." He dropped the long-standing U.S. demand that linked negotiations to Iran's compliance with U.N. resolutions requiring suspension of its uranium enrichment program. Instead, he proposed an unconditional dialogue to address outstanding problems -- even as Iran's production of enriched uranium continued apace.

Perhaps most significantly, as a key pillar in his effort to win over Iran's leadership, Obama also seemed prepared to assuage the regime's greatest fear: its lack of legitimacy in the eyes of its own people. For years, Iran's rulers have viewed a U.S.-backed rebellion, or "velvet revolution," as the most serious threat to their survival. Iranian officials regularly charged the Bush administration, with its harsh rhetoric but modest democracy promotion efforts, with fomenting regime change.

Obama moved quickly to take regime change off the table. Focused on the priority of stopping Iran's nuclear progress, and assuming (quite mistakenly) that Iran's theocracy was solidly entrenched, Obama signaled early on that the Islamic Republic's legitimacy was not at issue in his eyes and Iran's internal affairs not a matter of U.S. concern.

Already the president is said to have dispatched two private messages to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader, assuring him of America's desire to achieve a historic accommodation between Washington and Tehran. Publicly, evidence of the shift in U.S. approach was perhaps on starkest display in the president's March message on the occasion of the Persian new year. Whereas similar statements by President Bush addressed only the Iranian people, President Obama made a point of speaking in respectful tones to Iran's leaders as well. While Bush dwelled on the regime's brutality against its own citizens, Obama failed to even mention human rights. And where Bush derisively questioned the legitimacy of Iran's "unelected rulers," Obama stressed his desire to see "the Islamic Republic of Iran ... take its rightful place in the community of nations."

Of course, providing assurances to unsavory regimes about the United States' benign intentions toward their longevity is nothing particularly novel, especially as part of a quid pro quo to achieve what are judged to be more important U.S. objectives. Indeed, there's already precedent in Iran's case. In 1981, as part of the Algiers accords that ended the Iranian hostage crisis, the Jimmy Carter administration pledged "that it is and from now on will be the policy of the United States not to intervene, directly or indirectly, politically or militarily, in Iran's internal affairs." And who can doubt that, before surrendering his weapons of mass destruction in 2003, Libyan strongman Muammar al-Qaddafi first made sure that George W. Bush would not inflict on him the same fate as Saddam Hussein?

Yet however meritorious a strategy premised on reconciling America, once and for all, with Iran's revolutionary theocracy may have appeared in the abstract several months ago, it has been thrown into serious doubt by the reality of Iran's post-election tumult. Having rigged the vote, the regime has cracked down viciously on protesters, sadistically abused prisoners, and staged a series of grotesque show trials. Despite widespread repression, challenges to the theocracy's core tenets continue to mount week after week, as do the chants of "Death to the dictator!" The regime's legitimacy lies in tatters, its fragility exposed, the prospect of its eventual collapse never more real.

It is ironic, of course, that just as the Obama administration seemed prepared to write off regime change forever, the Iranian people have made it a distinct possibility. It would be tragic indeed if the United States took steps to bolster the staying power of Iran's dictatorship at precisely the moment when so many Iranians appear prepared to risk everything to be rid of it. It would also seem strategically shortsighted to risk throwing this regime a lifeline, because nothing seems more likely to enhance the prospects for peacefully resolving the nuclear issue than the Islamic Republic's replacement by a more democratic government. Finally, at a practical level, it seems unlikely that Iran's rulers would today find much solace in yet another U.S. assurance to steer clear of their internal affairs. They are living their worst nightmare and seem convinced that Washington's hand lies behind it.

Persuading Iran's paranoid, anti-American theocrats to forego nuclear weapons was always going to be a long shot. Iran's ongoing political crisis has made that task even harder. But it may also have created the most promising chance yet for addressing the Iranian nuclear threat short of war. However engagement now unfolds, Obama should do nothing to undermine this historic opportunity.

David McNew/Getty Images

 

John P. Hannah, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, was national security advisor to Vice President Dick Cheney from 2005 to 2009.

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JAY GETTY

6:34 PM ET

September 11, 2009

The USA worked hard keeping the Ayatollahs in power since 1979

Iran invaded US property in Tehran and kidnapped our diplomats in 1979 and held them till 1981. No USA response!

By 1983, Iran’s private proxy army Hizbully attacked the USA army barracks in Lebanon and murdered over 200 Americans. No USA response!

1984 Hizbully, Iran’s private proxy army murdered American Malcolm Kerr. No USA response!

1985, Hizbully hijacking of TWA flight 847 murdered an American. No American response!

1990s Iran attacks two Jewish targets in Argentina—the 1992 bombing of the Israeli Embassy (killing twenty-nine) and the 1994 bombing of a Jewish community center. Iranian officials are under indictment for those attacks. No American response.

2003-2009 Iran build IEDs and sends them to Iranian operatives in Iraq and murder thousands of Americans. No USA response.

2009: the USA does not lift a finger to help the protestors in Iran bring down the Ayatollahs.

Et Al less unequivocally Iranian attacks

The USA: Demoquack and Richpublicon administrations alike, clearly and unequivocally by their actions, fully support the Iranian regime and are delighted they are crossing the nuclear threshold.

Talk your way out of those inconvenient politically incorrect truths: and you will be talking till you believe your own BS

 

TOMKAT52

9:59 AM ET

September 12, 2009

warrior

Another soldier in the keyborad brigade is ready to use his keystrokes to battle for democracy and freedom...

 

JAY GETTY

10:31 AM ET

September 12, 2009

yes "the pen is mightier than the sword"

yes "the pen is mightier than the sword"

 

GARHUNT05

3:04 PM ET

September 12, 2009

Iran and america

Jay you should look up the Eisenhower administration and Operation Ajax where America did respond to a possible communist threat in Iran. Long story short we sponsored the overthrow of a Democratically elected leader who was anti communist and pro-nationalist and installed a brutal Autocratic leader who was overthrown in favor of a theocratic ruler. So the US embassy thing was the USA's fault. However it should be noted that a lot of American foreighn policy has come back to bite us Take Ho chi Mihn hated by America in the 50's and 60's for leading the communist movement, he was actually pro freedom in his early years and was present at Versailles to petition for the freedom of the Veitnamese people it is even said he cited the Declaration of Independence in his plea, The US ignored him and the soviets didn't. or during the Soviet/Afghanistan conflict we helped Osama bin Laden and Alqueda with money and weapons and helped radicalize the muslim world. lets also look at Cuba which the US formally occupied from 1898 to 1902 and had heavy influence over until 1934 hell even Batista whom the US supported had a lot of communists in his cabinet. We backed Manuel we gave money and weapons to Saddam, and we let the Kurds out to dry. and in 1979 jimmy charter did send a military force to try and extract the hostages but the heliocopter crashed.

 

GRANT

6:45 PM ET

September 12, 2009

While you are in essence

While you are in essence correct I would like to suggest a use of Word and a focus on grammar. It is not easy to read through this. Also while the embassy hostages may have come out of the 1953 coup, that hardly excuses the people that took them hostage.

 

GRANT

6:42 PM ET

September 12, 2009

While I do respect the words

While I do respect the words of people that have actually been in positions of authority before, I also recall that Mr. Hannah was reported by the Washington Post as suggesting that there might be attacks on Iran in 2007 under a different situation. I am not certain that this is more than wishful thinking on his part.

As for the logic of such a move, I suggest we look at the hard facts first. The first is that the United States would be forced to both make the highly unpopular move of opening up a third war with even more soldiers as well as drawing soldiers from two fronts where they are already needed. This could be countered with concept that the opposition in Iran could be supported by air strikes and naval bombardments, but that ignores the vast difference between the situation in Iraq and Afghanistan in 2001 and 2003, and the Iran now. In Afghanistan and Iraq there was already multiple armed groups seeking the overthrow of the current leadership. In Afghanistan we had the Northern Alliance, in Iraq we had the Kurds and the 'Prince of the Marshes', while in Iran there is no such group that is sufficiently armed and of great enough size to actually do the work of securing the ground.

Then there is the practicality of moving American soldiers into Iran (which would probably become necessary as Afghanistan has shown). Forget about sending them across the Iraqi border, the Shia Iraqis don't have the same interests as the United States and it is certainly within their national interests to keep good relations with Iran. In theory it could be done through the Persian Gulf but aquatic landings are hardly simple, especially when one has probable cause to believe that Iran has been practicing asymmetric tactics such as using boats with explosives to sink larger ships (does anyone recall the Iranian boats that would follow U.S ships a few years ago?).

After that there is the problem of actually fighting. The actions of the Iranian military and the Basiji are well on the side of the Iranian government, unlike the Iraqi military which largely deserted weeks into the fighting. While I presume that the level of training and technology for the United States is higher, the only kind of intelligent victory for the United States when we have two other fronts to worry about is a quick and decisive one.

Even if the first three are overcome there would be the effect on the price of oil across the world. You can be certain that it would be sent sky-rocketing as a result of such an invasion. It can of course be claimed that this is far less problematic than a continued Islamic Iran but that ignores the fact that economics is an important part of foreign policy. Only foolish officials try to make up for a poor economy by an increased military.

Fourthly is the matter of Congress. There is practically speaking no chance that President Obama would be able to convince Congress to declare war on Iran. He could use some presidential order or a vaguely worded statement in the Patriot Act to launch attacks, but I suggest that someone else here try to get that past the current Congress. The ensuing lynch-mob of Senators and Representatives should be amusing.

Following this is the problem of Russia. Russia has already made it clear that it will not support any attacks on Iran, and in fact may not support any further actions at all. We could of course ignore them, but doing so will cause more problems in the Middle East, Eastern Europe, and Central Asia. Russia can close its airspace to NATO planes and pressure Central Asian nations to close NATO bases (bases we cannot manage without). It can look for excuses to attack nations that are close to NATO but not part of it such as Ukraine. Russia can support Syria against any pressure from the United States, particularly over its role in the death of former Prime Minister Hariri. To sum this up, Russia can make quite a bit of trouble that jeopardizes our priorities.

Now if we assume that an invasion actually does happen and is succesful there is still the political effect of this on Shia's in Iran and worldwide. To someone not accustomed to reading the New York Times, BBC, Wall Street Journal, and other such news sources it would easy to see this as another attempt of the United States to attack Islam (made even easier by idiotic buzz-words like 'islamofacism' which are attacks on Islam). To say that there would be a widespread insurgency in Iran in a matter of months is in my opinion obvious. There might be an opposition to the current Iranian regime at the moment, but it is still a matter of an Iranian regime opposed by Iranians. If the United States were to enter the equation it quickly becomes 'foreign power invading our nation'.

Lastly there is the matter of nuclear weapons and Iran. If we work under the assumption that we could work through all of the previous problems to this there is still the fundamental problem of actually ensuring that Iran would not seek to gain nuclear weapons again. To believe that a regime we installed would not a few years later seek those weapons as insurance that no other power would attempt the same. Indeed, short of going through the entire mess again we would have no means of stopping it, it's not as though we could imprison every scientist who worked on it simply for following orders or effectively destroy all of the data.

Mr.Hannah, while I wish you well in life would you please stop doing your best to save the United States by ruining it?

 

JAY GETTY

8:39 AM ET

September 13, 2009

Iran with nuclear IED to give Hizbully/Iran agents in Iraq et al

It is easier to wipe out a 70 lb weakling than a 70lb weakling using nuclear blackmail bombs.

Iran/Ayatollahs have been at war with the "West" for 30 years. Grant made the case clear for taking that menace out once and for all: it is much easier now than when Iran extends its nuclear umbrella over its far flung terror organization that has been attacking us for 30 years.

 

GRANT

2:21 PM ET

September 13, 2009

Actually I didn't say that,

Actually I didn't say that, I'm sorry if I gave you the wrong impression but I suggest that you reread my comments. I argued that the difficulties, uncertainties, and demonstrated failure of forced democracy meant that seeking to overthrow the Iranian government would be a foolish venture, particularly in the current world. Besides that, please recall that while the Iranian leaders are religious they are not stupid. It is one thing to begin production to deter attacks and force the United States to seriously negotiate, it is quite another to give nuclear weapons to potentially uncontrollable groups that might decide to use them.

 

ABU DIS

12:14 AM ET

September 14, 2009

I think the Iranian leaders are not religious and are stupid

I think the Iranian leaders are not religious and are stupid. Unless you mean the Iranian leaders murder religiously anyone who questions them. I agree with Jay that your arguments clearly indicate how easy it will be to get rid of the Hitlers of Iran before they get a nuclear bomb. Only stupid people murder incold blood like the Iranian leaders do.

 

GRANT

11:22 AM ET

September 14, 2009

I don't know why people think

I don't know why people think I showed how easy it would be, in fact when I wrote I was trying to put in every difficulty that I thought would emerge to counter the idea.

To summarize and settle the matter:
1. The trouble of finding soldiers. Without soldiers air strikes and naval bombardments would be useless. We cannot move the soldiers from Iraq or Afghanistan, politically speaking there is zero chance of sending more abroad even if they could be logistically supported, and there are none in Iran that we could use.
2. How soldiers would get there. They could not go through Iraq and aquatic landings are very risky.
3. We would need a quick victory. Iran has an army that appears to have good morale and will not be defeated as quickly as Iraq.
4. The price of oil would be sent skyward. This is actually a problem, not a complaint.
5. Congress would not consent to an invasion.
6. Russia would show its displeasure by stopping our efforts in other areas.
7. An insurgency would definitely arise and ruin our efforts.
8. This would not guarantee that Iran would not produce nuclear weapons in the future.

I hope that this clears matters up.

 

A BALANCED VIEW

2:16 PM ET

September 13, 2009

We tried that once. We are still paying dearly for THAT mistake.

We Installed the Shah, a US friendly, unbelievably brutal dictator who literally single handedly inspired the rise and ultimate success of the Islamic Revolution in Iran. To say that we have been regretting that move for decades since would be a dramatic understatement.

The author is either unaware of history and it's consequences, or is simply to blinded by ambitions of US hegemony to see the obvious connection.

 

GRANT

2:25 PM ET

September 13, 2009

I personally consider the

I personally consider the affair to have been a stupid mistake brought on by a failure to see the new international arena for what it was, but I suggest that you look at it in terms of U.S interests. From 1953 to 1979 the United States had a nation from which to counterbalance Soviet interests with Syria and Iraq, a period of 26 years. If you told an official in 1953 that they would have 26 years of that followed by perhaps thirty or forty years of a hostile regime that backs terrorist groups they might have decided to go ahead with the coup anyway.

 

A BALANCED VIEW

4:49 PM ET

September 13, 2009

It has been an unmitigated disaster.

First, I cannot condone replacing a democratically elected, secular leader with a monster who happens to be US friendly. Even so, it has been an unmitigated disaster even of your the type who thinks that we must do ANYTHING to continue to move toward US hegemony.

Second, I think we are dramatically over emphasizing the threat that Iran poses in the region. They hate Al qeada, would kill Osama Bin Laden on sight, and have not attacked another nation in about 250 years. They sponsor Hezbollah and to some small degree hamas, but those groups receive support from a variety of nations in the region, and we don't demonize them. In fact, If Iran stopped all aid tomorrow, those groups sould still be thriving and active, because at the end of the day, they continue to exist as a result of the decades of Israel occupation and settlement of palestinian land, and due to the MASSIVE assaults (more collective punishment than anything else) that Israel has heaped up Lebanon. When those things end, those groups will dwindle to nothing, Iranian support notwithstanding.

We would do a great deal more good to get tough with the Israelis and force them to finally abandon all settlements and the occupation and save both the US and them decades more terror inspired by the worlds only violently enforced colonial settler movement.

 

ABU DIS

9:29 PM ET

September 13, 2009

A BALANCED VIEW from the mental ward. Try telling the truth

Israel had a kingdom and deeds to all the lands 2000 years before Mohammed came round. Israel never relinquished its claim and Bedwins are welcome to continue wondering. Non Jewish Palesteinians do not exist in history books prior to 1967. If we Arabs had accepted partition in 1948 instead of invading...but we did not (now we started a fight, got beat up, and cry to momma); we lost and that is that. Live in peace and prosperity with Israel or we can stay in the 7th century making up nonexistent versions of history.

 

GRANT

9:44 PM ET

September 13, 2009

If you want to go over

If you want to go over ancient history and land rights perhaps we should expel all English from Norther Ireland, all Russians from Georgia, Ukraine, all Ukrainians from Crimea (which shouldn't be part of Ukraine either), remove all non-First Nation citizens from what makes up the United States of America...

I'm not sure if you really are Arab or not (it would just as easy for me to claim to be Republican) but the fact of the matter is that little things like who owns what land under what circumstances can change rather easily, and all that matters is how well a politician can spin it.

 

MUSICMASTER

6:39 AM ET

September 16, 2009

who really won the elections?

Until a few weeks before the elections the color-revolution style promotion of Moussavi set in Ahmadinejad was leading in the polls with a clear majority. Formally Moussavi may have won. But winning thanks to foreign support raises its own legitimacy questions. And it is a fact that the US spent tens of millions on "democracy promotion" in Iran.

The color revolutions may have a good name in the West. But we should also take into account that both Djindic (Serbia) and Yushenko (Ukraine) a few years later ended up with approval rates below the ten percent.

Despite everything Iran is still one of the most democratic countries in the Middle East. Mr. Hannah is partial when he doesn't see any need to talk about "unsavory regimes" in countries like Egypt and Saudi Arabia. You cannot say with one authoritarian country that it is developing well and with another that it needs regime change without any more substantive argument than calling it words like "unsavory".

 
January/February 2010